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ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 80 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Not specified
Likely dose
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Search/NCT06143319
NCT06143319N/ACompleted

The Chronic Pain Brain: Structural White and Gray Matter Correlates of Impaired Muscle Control and Deficient Pain Processing

University Ghent·observational·Posted Nov 22, 2023·Updated Nov 22, 2023

In Brief

An observational study for Low Back Pain and 4 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 80 participants across 1 site.

Detailed Summary

Although the cause of persistent non-specific low back pain (LBP) remains unknown, structural and functional alterations of the brain, alterations in the lumbar muscles and dysfunction of the central nervous system have been proposed as underlying mechanisms. In this case-control study, 1) brain structure/function, 2) lumbar muscle function and 3) central pain processing are compared across four groups: 1) healthy participants, 2) recurrent LBP (both during pain flare and during pain remission), 3) chronic LBP and 4) fibromyalgia. According to previous research, healthy participants and fibromyalgia patients are two extremes of a "musculoskeletal pain continuum". Healthy participants representing one extreme of the continuum with no pain and fibromyalgia representing the other extreme of the continuum with chronic widespread pain. It is thought that different LBP populations (i.e. (sub)acute, recurrent, chronic LBP) float between the aforementioned extremes. Past studies already highlighted the need for studies comparing the pathophysiological mechanisms for different pain syndromes to identify common underlying mechanisms across pain syndromes. For this reason, the goal of the current study is to compare alterations in brain structure/function, alterations in lumbar muscle function and alterations in central pain processing across the aforementioned "musculoskeletal pain continuum". It is hypothesized that longer duration of pain (recurrent vs chronic) and the extensiveness of the pain (one location vs widespread pain) are associated with more pronounced alterations in 1) brain structure/function, 2) lumbar muscle function and 3) central pain processing.

Study Details

Study Typeobservational
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesBelgium

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
20162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
First PostedNov 22, 2023
Enrollment StartOct 1, 2015
Primary CompletionOct 30, 2021
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 6.1 yearsPosted 2.6 years ago